Magneto-electric signal transmission system



Dec. 13, 196s F. @HRT 3,291,918

MAGNETOELECTRIC SIGNAL TRANSMISSION SYSTEM Original Filed May 13, 1959 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Dec. 13, 1966 F. KUHRT 3,291,918

MAGNETO-ELECTRIC SIGNAL TRANSMISSION SYSTEM Original Filed May 13. 1959 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 United States Patent Olice 3,291,918 Patented Dec. 13, 1966 8 Claims. (Cl. 179-1002) This application is a division of my copending application Serial No. 812,915, led May 13, 1959, now Patent Number 3,041,416.

My invention relates to systems for the reproduction of, or response to, magnetic signals, comprising at least one magnetic signal transmitter and at least one transducer which receives the signals and translates them into an electric voltage. Such systems serve control or regulating purposes as exemplified iby magnetic limit switches or other switching devices that are to operate Aon the proximity principle without the aid of movable switch contacts. Another application of such systems, also pertinent to my invention, is for the reproduction of magnetic signals recorded on wires, tapes or other carriers that travel relative to the transducer, as is the case with the reproduction of magnetic sound recordings.

It has been proposed to effect a response to magnetic signals, particularly for reproducing sound from magnetic tape recordings, by means of a pickup head in which a signal-responsive voltage is generated by a Hall generator rather than being induced in a coil of wire. Such Hall generators, known as such, comprise an electrically resistive semiconductor wafer, the so-called Hall plate, which has two terminal electrodes at opposite ends for passing a current through the plate, and which has two probe electrodes, called Hall electrodes, usually located midway Ibetween the two terminal electrodes and spaced from each other in a direction transverse lto the current axis defined by the two terminal electrodes. When the Hall plate is not subjected to a magnetic iield having a eld component perpendicular to the plane of the plate, the two Hall electrodes have both the same potential so that the voltage between them is zero. When a magnetic eld is active, a voltage, called Hall voltage, appears between the two Hall electrodes and, for a constant current flowing through the plate, is proportional to the intensity of the magnetic field.

With such Hall-voltage transducers, the response of the transducer is independent of the relative travelling speed -between transmitter and transducer which is of advantage, for example, when using the transmitter-transducer system for proximity-switching or positional-control purposes.

However, the Hall-voltage generating devices heretofore proposed for such transducer purposes leave much to be desired with respect to sensitivity and accuracy of performance; and it is an object of my invention to considerably improve a magnetic-signal transducer system of this type relative to these shortcomings.

According to my invention, the transducer for response to the magnetic signals of a signal carrier which is movable on a given path relative to the transducer or vice versa, consists of a pickup head which comprises a magnetizable core structure with two limbs forming between each other a narrow gap that faces the signal carrier along the path of relative motion; and I mount the Hall plate of a Hall-voltage generator directly in the just-mentioned gap.

The signal transmitter or carrier for cooperation with such a pickup head may consist essentially of two permanent magnets which are mounted closely adjacent to each other and form together a narrow intermediate field gap. However, the signal transmitter may also consist of a thin strip, having about 10-micron thickness for example, which consists of permanent-magnetic material and is magnetized in its longitudinal or transverse direction. Such transmitters are particularly suitable for control or regulating purposes where it is -desired that the pickup head respond by an abrupt change in output voltage when the transmitter and the pickup head assume, or pass through, a position of proximity to each other. However, for other purposes the transmitter may also consist of a magnetogram carrier, for example a sound recording tape, which, if desired, permits changing the magnetic signals by erasing and remagnetizing the carrier. A carrier of the latter type, generally suitable for the recording and reproduction of sound, may also be used for control purposes in which case the carrier may consist of nonmagnetizable material provided with local coatings or attachments of magnetic character to for'm the signals. In each of these cases of proximity response, the occurrence of a zero passage or maximum of the Hall voltage at the point of exact proximity between transmitter and transducer can be utilized with great accuracy.

The Hall plate of a pickup head according to the invention, mounted directly in the active gap of the head facing the signal carrier, is preferably embedded between two small ferromagnetic cover plates of high permeability. These magnetizable plates, serving as pole pieces, are preferably made of ferrite in order to also serve insulating purposes. The transducer may be placed in contact with the signal carrier, for example a recording tape, so that the gap and the Hall plate extend substantially in a plane transverse and perpendicular to the relative travel path.

In some cases it is of advantage to provide auxiliary means for securing a direct, magnetically active engagement of the pickup head with the tape, so that the Hall plate virtually engages the signal carrier at one of its edges where a Hall electrode is located. To. make this possible, the electric lead of the lower Hall electrode, i.e,., the elec-trode adjacent to the carrier when the pickup head is placed from above onto the carrier, may consist of a soft-iron wire Vembedded in one of the above-mentioned ferrite cover plates.

According to another feature vof my invention it is of advantage to design the lead of the other Hall electrode as an electrolytically deposited strip of good conducting metal, such 'as silver, which extends in a shallow groove over the front surface of the pickup head. The shallow groove, having a depth of a few microns forrexample, protects the electrolytically deposited lead of the lower Hall electrode from frictional Wear. However, the electrode leads may also consist of thin strips of conducting material, for example silver, -which lform an extremely thin coating produced by precipitating the conductor material from the vaporous state. Such conductor strip may also be produced by various lother methods, including the use of colloidal solutions of silver lor other conducting material, or suspensions of such materials in finely distributed form, within a solvent readily evaporable =by heat. After depositing the solution or suspension, a conducting strip-shaped electrode lead of slight thickness can be formed simply by heating.v In allsuch cases, the semiconducting material of the Hall plate can be kept insulated from the leads by yaporizing onto the semiconductor surface an insulating coating, preferablyhof silicon oxide, lbefore depositing the conductor material.

The width of the field gap formed between the two cover plates or pole pieces of ferrite is a determining factor for the upper limit frequency of the pi-ckup head with respect to a givenrelative travelling speed between signal carrier and pickup head. However, due to the porosity of the ferrite pieces, the effective gap is considerably wider than the geometrically measured gap. Depending upon the structure of the pole pieces and the width of the geometrically measured gap, the effective gap Width may amount up to twice the measured width 'of the gap. This applies not only to pole pieces of ferrite but is generally applicable to porous materials.

' According to another feature of my invention therefore, the width of the etfective'gap, when using pole pieces of ferrite or other porous materials, is still rfurther reduced by embedding or placing the Hall plate 'between thin sheet-metal pieces of soft-magnetic material. Preferably, suitable as such material are ferromagnetic alloys of a slight thermal coefficient of expansion. The thickness of the sheets is preferably between 0.1 and 0.5 mm` The invention will `be further described with reference to the embodiments illustrated by way of example in the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 illustrates schematically a magnetic-signal responsive tranducer system applicable for proximity-dependent control operations;

FIG. 1a is a graph showing a typical transducer output voltage as occurring in such a system;

FIG. 2 is -a schematic diagram of a Hall plate as used in the pickup head according to FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 shows schematically` a signal transmitter of different design applicable in a system otherwise similar to FIGS. 1 and 2; A

FIG. 3a is a graph indicating a typical pickup output voltage as obtainable with a transmitter according to FIG. 3;

FIG. 4 is a sectional view of a pickup head similar to the one shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 5,shows -a lateral View of a pickup head according to FIG. 4 in conjunction lwith a magnetic recording tape;

FIG.` 6 is a schematic perspective view of part of a modified pickup head;

FIG. 7 is a sectional view similar to FIG. 4, but em- 'bodying a dilferent modification of the Hall-generator leads;

FIG. 8 shows schematically, and partly in cross section, a view onto the tape-engaging end of a pickup head according to the invention for use with magnetic recording tapes; and

FIG. 9 illustrates a modification of signal transmitting means applic-able with a pickup head according to the invention.

This divisional application is primarily concerned with the signal transmission system described in FIGS. 1, 2, 3

' and 3a. The other FIGURES, 4 to 8, are here pertinent primarily in respect to details and different forms of the utilizable signal pickup devices. According to FIG. l the signal transmitter consists essentially of two permanent magnets 1 and 2 which are mounted in aligned relation to each other with mutually opposed polarities. The two magnets 1 and 2 are cemented or otherwise fastened together so that a nonmagnetic intermediate layer 3 remains as a field gap of slight thickness, for example 10 microns. The transmitter assembly is inserted into a non-magnetic glideway structure 4 whose surface 5 is ground or otherwise smoothened in order to serve as a glide surface vfor the pickup head. The magnetic lines of force are symbolically illustrated by arrows 6. A

A pickuphead 8 is movable in the direction of the arrow 7 along the glide-Way surface S. The pickup head comprisesia core struc-ture of high permeabilitywhich' forms yan effective gap at the side facing the transmitter immediately adjacent to the glide-way. The magnetizable structure in the illustrated embodiment comprises two limbs consisting of ferrite plates 10` and 11 which form lbetween each other the above-mentioned gap so that the gap extends `perpendicular to the .travelling path and in a direction transverse to the travelling direction indicated by the arrow 7. The width of the gap may be 10 microns, but is preferably smaller than 10 microns. The `Hall plate 9 is located -directly in the gap so that its plane also extends perpendicular to the travelling direction and transverse thereto.

FIG. la represents the curve 13 of the output voltage UH produced by the pickup head in relation to the travelling path. When the Hall plate passes through a location near the narrow intermediate layer 3 |between the two permanent magnets 1 and 2, the Hall voltage passes abruptly through ,the zero value. This zero passage can be utilized as a control command, for example by means of a switching amplier connected to the pickup.

As schematically shown in FIG. 2, the semiconductor wafer of the Hall plate 9 is provided with two terminal electrodes 15 and 16 at opposite ends and has two point electrodes or other probe electrodes 17 and 1S midway between ythe terminal electrodes 15, 16 and spaced from each other in a direction transverse to the spacing direction of the electrodes 15, 16. The Hall plate 9 consists preferably of a semiconductor compound of higher carrier mobility than germanium. Iridium antirnonide (InSb) or indium arsenide (InAs) are eminently suitable for this purpose. The terminal electrodes 15 and 16 are connected at 19 to a source of energizing current which, tfor the control purposes above mentioned consists of a constant direct current. The Hall voltage, represented by curve 13 in FIG. la, is taken from across the Hall electrodes 17, 18 at the output terminals denoted by 20.

I It will be noted that the Hall plate 9 has its one edge that is provided with the Hall electrode 17, located immediately adjacent to the signal carrier or glide-way structure 4.

The two permanent magnets 1 and 2 in the glide-way structure 4 may also be aranged a-s shown in FIG. 3. In this embodiment the two magnets have poles of different polarity located adjacent to each other. 'The magnetic field is such that the Hall voltage, represented by curve 13 in FIG. 3a, passes through a sharply peaked maximum when the gap and Hall plate of the pickup are in proximity of the inter-mediate layer 3.

When using, in lieu `of the two permanent magnets, an erasable magnetic-signal carrier which extends along the glide path, then the magnetic impulse having a width of a few microns can be placed upon the tape by means of an ordinary recording head. In this case, however, the smaller magnetic signal ux results in obtaining in the receiving pickup a signal of considerably smaller intensity than when using permanent magnets.

The pickup head shown sectionally in FIG. 4 is particularly designed -for operation with magnetic tape. .One

of the two ferrite plates 22 is visible in this illustration,

`both ferrite plates 21 and 22 with the intermediate Hall plate 23 being apparent from FIG. 5. Denoted by 24 and 25 are non-magnetic spacer strips. The current supply leads 26 and 27 extend through the space between the Itwo ferrite plates. The signal carrier consists of a tape 28 which is guided over rollers 29 and 30 so that the two lfeirrite plates are located above the tape which engages the lower ends of both plates.

One of the two leads of the Hall electrodes, namely the one denoted by 31, extends from above directly to the Iupper edge of the Hall plate 23. The lead of the lower Hall electrode, however, is designed in a particular manner in order to permit a direct magnetically active `engagement of the head with the tape. In the embodiment of FIGS. 4 and 5 the lead connected to the lower Hall electrode is designed as a soft-iron Wire 33 which is embedded in the ferrite ,cover plate 32.

The embodiment illustrated in FIG. 6 exemplies another Way of mounting the lead for the lower Hall electrode in such a manner that a direct magnetic contact of the pickup head with the recording tape is secured. The semiconductor layer 23 is in fa-ce-to-face contact with a fenrite base plate 35 and is covered on the opposite side by a ferrite cover plate 36. As in the other embodiments, the ferrite plates may be rreplaced by plates of a different suitable material of high permeability. The illustration shows perspectively the bottom side of the pickup head, that is the side facing the magnetic irecording tape and resting upon the tape when in operation. Shown a-t 3-7 is an electrolytically deposited connection from the semiconductor 23 to the Hall-electrode wire 38. This connection, consisting for example of a strip of ydeposited silver, is located in a groove or other recess at the surface of the ferrite base plate. The terminal electrodes for passing current through the Hall plate are denoted by 39 and 4f). In the embodiment shown in FIG. 7, still another way of connecting the lower Hall electrode with the appertaining lead is em-ployed. According to FIG. 7, in which the same .reference numerals are used as in FIGS. 4 and 5 for respectively corresponding elements, a thin strip 34 of copper or silver se-rves as an electrode lead. The strip 34 is deposited -by vaporization, cathode scattering or similar depositing methods. The necessary electric insulation between the semiconductor layer 23 and the lead 34 is obtained by vaporizing a silicon oxide coating onto the semiconductor surface before applying the lead 34. A` pickup of such design is particularly well suitable for reproducingV acoustic record-ings. Since the output circuit of the pickup head is purely ohmic and is capable of delivering `a power output that can be sub- 'jected to load current, the output voltage can be used for direct control of a current amplifier, which makes it possible to connect the pickup with a transistor ampli- `fier Without need for intermediate voltage amplification.

In the embodiment according to FIG. 8 the Hall plate -consists of a thin wafer or layer 41 of a suitable semiconducting compound, particularly of the type AHIBV. Compounds -of this type consist of an element of the third group in the periodic system with an element of the fifth group, indium arsenide or indium antimonide being particularly well suitable.

The two pole pieces 42 and 43 consist of ferrite or other high-permeable material and are kept rigidly at a -given distance from each other by means of spacer pieces 44 and 45 yof non-magnetizable material. Located between the semiconductor wafer 41 and the 4ferritic pole pieces are thin metal sheets 46 `and 47 of soft-magnetic Iiron which may have a thickness of about 0.3 mm., for example. The sides of the sheet mem-bers facing the semiconductor wafer 41 are preferably coated with a thin coating of insulating material. Such an insulating coating is preferably given a thickness not more than about l micron. rThe insulating coatings may be formed of silicon oxide, aluminum oxide or the like, yand the insulatino substances may be deposited by vaporization or other known and suitable methods. The Hall plate is provided with terminal electrodes 48 and 49 for supplying electric cur-rent. The one Hall electrode lead 50 located on the front side of the pickup, facing the signal carrier, consists of a strip 50 of conducting material electrolytically deposited in a groove of the ferrite plate 43, substantially as described above with reference to lead 37 in FIG. 6.

The embodiment illustrated in FIG. 9 differs from those described with reference to FIGS. 1 and 3 in that the signal transmitter comprises a narrow strip 51 of permanent-magnetic material which is magnetized in the longitudinal or transverse direction and is embedded in the glideway structure 4. When the pickup head 8 passes by, or is located near, the member 51, a peaked Hall voltage is produced similar to the one represented by curve 13 in. FIG. 3a. The system is suitable mainly for positional control purposes as described above.

Since a pickup head according to the invention responds to the magnetic induction itself and not to the rate of change of the magnetic induction, such a pickup head can be used for static response to magnetic signals. This is of particular advantage, for example, when using the device for automatic control purposes such as for the programming of manufacturing machinery, particularly machine tools. Consequently the invention is advantageously applicable not only for sound-reproducing purposes Where a high-quality frequency characteristic is required, but also for measuring, control and regulating purposes, parti-cularly where very slow changes of magnetic induction must be coped with. Such conditions are encountered, for example, in cases where the magnetic record represents measuring values which must be reproduced mainly in accordance with the intensity of the magnetic induction itself, rather than in dependence, or exclusive dependence, upon the rate of inductance change.

In the control of machine tools -or other fabricating equipment in which programming commands are represented in form of magnetic signals on a signal carrier, the travelling motion of the carrier relative to the pickup head may be given a' Variable speed including, if desired, the case of complete standstill, without impairing the response to the signal transmission. Further applications include the field of telegraphy techniques. Of particular advantage for a static response is the fact that the output voltage of the pickup head can be modulated by passing, instead of a constant direct current, an alternating current of the desired modulating frequency through the terminals i9 (FIG. 2) of the Hall plate. In this caseV the output voltage at terminals 26 is an alternating voltage of the same frequency upon which a modulation is imposed in accordance with the magnetic signals responded to.

Also by virtue of the fact that the pickup head responds to magnetic induction itself, the invention affords a particularly favorable reproduction of low-frequency signals when operating with sound recordings such as magnetic recording tape or the like. With the known pickup heads of the inductive type, the desired frequency fidelity of the output voltage is difiicult to obtain over the entire audible frequencyspectrum, and the defective frequency characteristic must be corrected in an amplifier by particular distortion-eliminating means. In contrast, a Hall-voltage generating pickup head according to the invention has an inherently good frequency characteristic, due to the fact that the Hall plate is located directly in the active gap of the pickup head facing the signal carrier.

For a given travelling speed of the recording tape in a sound reproducer, the upper limit frequency is determined by the gap width of the pickup head. The smaller the width of this gap, the higher is the limit frequency. With inductive pickups, however, the efficiency greatly decreases with a decreasing gap width so that the gap width cannot be reduced at will. The same reduction in efficiency occurs with Hall-voltage generating pickups as heretofore proposed in which the Hall generator is mounted in the upper portion of an essentially C-shaped magnetizable core, so that the plate was located remote from the signal carrier. In contrast thereto, a considerably improved efiiciency is obtained in a pickup head according to the invention, also by virtue of the fact that the Hall plate is located in the lower gap facing the signal carrier and adjacent thereto. These features obviate the above-mentioned decrease in efficiency occurring in the known pickups when the gap width is made very small. In the pickup head according to the invention, the reduction in gap width causes the magnetic flux to be better drawn off and directed through the Hall plate. This permits the provision of extremely narrow gaps so that, on the one hand, the upper limit frequency is very high and, on the other hand, the upper as well as the lower limit frequencies remain well responded to so that high efficiency is secured throughout the entire frequency `width is smaller than 4 microns.

range. This, in sound reproducing devices, is tantamount to permitting a considerable reduction in tape travel speed in comparison with the tape speeds heretofore customary with inductive pickup heads.

The gap, as a rule, is made so narrow at the place of engagement with the signal carrier that the effective gap However, still smaller gaps are preferable. When using Hall plates produced by vapor-deposition of semiconductor substance, or by grinding a semiconducting crystal layer and subsequently reducing its thickness by electrolytic etching, an effective gap width down to approximately one micron can be produced. With the aid of such a pickup head, the limit frequency can be raised or, as mentioned, the tape travel speed can be reduced.` The former advantage is of particular value for magnetically storing television programs or other phenomena requiring a high limit frequency. Many such problems have heretofore failed to find a satisfactory solution because, with inductive pickup heads, it would be necessary to operate with unacceptably high tape speeds to afford recording and reproducing the high frequencies. v

It will be obvious to those skilled in the art, upon studying this disclosure, that my invention permits of various Vmodifications with respect to the design of the magneticsignal carrier `and pickup head, and may be employed for purposes other than particularly illustrated and described herein, without departing from the essential features of my invention and within the scope of the claims annexed hereto.

I claim:

1. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus,

comprising `a magnetic signal transmitter and a pickup device for response to magnetic signals issuing from said Signal transmitter along a given path of relative motion, the pickup device comprising la Hall plate of semiconductor material disposed transversely t-o said path of relative motion, said Hall plate having current supply terminals defining a current axis which is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and which is longitudinal to the surface of the signal transmitter, the Hall plate having Hall voltage electrode means for producing a Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, said signal transmitter comprising two permanent magnets mounted with their magnetic axes transverse to said path of relative motion and with mutually Iopposed polarities beside each other and forming a narrow field gap between respective adjacent poles of opposite polarities, said iield gap facing said path of relative motion and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having iiux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto whereby the Hall voltage of said Hall plate passes through a maximal magnitude when said pickup device and said iield gap pass by each other.

2. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus, comprising a magnetic signal transmitter including a magnetic signal carrier and a pickup head for response to magnetic signals issuing from said signal carrier along a given path of relative motion, the pickup head comprising a magnetizable structure having two magnetizable plates located opposite each other and forming a gap facing said path of relative motion and extending transversely thereto, a Hall plate of semiconductor material mounted in said gap transversely to said path of relative motion, said Hall plate having two current supply terminals on two opposite edges respectively to define a current axis that is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and 'within said gap and is longitudinal to the surface of the signal carrier, and Hall voltage take-off electrode means for producing a Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, said signal transmitter comprising two permanent magnets mounted on said signal carrier with their magnetic axes transverse to said path of relative motion and with mutually opposed polarities. besides each other and forming a narrow field gap between respective adjacent 8 poles of opposite polarities, said field gap facing said path of relative motion, whereby the Hall voltage of said Hall plate is changed abruptly when said pickup head passes by said field gap, and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having tiux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto whereby the Hall voltage passes through a maximal magnitude.

3. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus, comprising a magnetic signal carrier and a pickup head for response to magnetic signals issuing from said signal carrier along a given path of relative motion, the pickup head comprising magnetizable structure having two magnetizable plates with respective parallel planar surfaces located opposite each other and forming a narrow essentially planar pickup gap facing said path of relative motion and extending at a right angle thereto, a Hall plate or" semiconductor material mounted in said gap substantially in face-to-face contact with said surfaces, said Hall plate having two current supply terminals on two opposite edges respectively to define a current axis that is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and is within said gap and is generally parallel of the surface ofthe signal carrier, and two Hall voltage take-off electrodes on the other two respective edges for producing between said two Hall electrodes av Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, one of said other two edges being located within said gap and at the gap side which faces said signal carrier and extending transverse to said path, the other of said two other edges being the edge that is remote from the signal carrier, saidv carrier comprising two permanent magnets mounted with their magnetic axes transverse to the said path of relative motion and with mutually opposed polarities beside each other and forming a narrow field gap between lrespective adjacent poles of opposite polarities, said field gap facing said path of relative motion, whereby the Hall voltage of said Hall plate is changed abruptly when said pickup head passes by said field gap, and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having flux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto whereby the Hall voltage passes through a maximal magnitude.

4. The apparatus defined in claim 3, the two magnetizable plates being of ferrite material, the Hall plate comprising a coating of semiconductor material on one of said ferrite plates, the semiconductor material being formed of a semiconductor compound having' a higher carrier mobility than germanium, taken from the group consisting of indium antimonide (InSb) and indium arsenide, the said pickup gap having at the side facing the signal carrier an effective gap width not greater than four microns.

5. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus, comprising a magnetic signal transmitter including a magnetic signal carrier and a pickup head for response to magnetic signals issuing from said signal carrier along a given path of relative motion, the pickup head comprising a magnetizable structure having two magnetizable plates located opposite each other and forming a gap facing said path of relative motion and extending transversely thereto, a Hall plate of semiconductor material mounted in said gap transversely to said path of relative motion, said Hall plate having two current supply terminals on two op-v posite edges respectively to define Ia current axis that is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and within said gap and is longitudinal to the surface of the signal carrier, and Hall voltage take-offl electrode means for producing a Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, said signal transmitter comprising two permanent magnets mounted on said signal carrier with at least one of the poles of one magnet disposed beside one'ofthe poles of the other magnet and forming a narrow field gap between said poles, said field gap facing said path of relative motion, whereby the magnitude of the Hall voltage generated by said Hall plate is changed abruptly when said pickup head passes by said field gap and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having ux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto.

6. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus, comprising a magnetic signal transmitter including magnetic signal carrier and a pickup head for response to magnetic signals issuing from said signal carrier along a given path of relative motion, the pickup head comprising a magnetizable structure having two magnetizable plates located opposite each other and forming a gap facing said path of relative motion and extending transversely thereto, a Hall plate of semiconductor material mounted in said gap transversely to said path of relative motion, said Hall plate having two current supply terminals on two opposite edges respectively to define a current axis that is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and within said gap and is longitudinal to the surface of the signal carrier, and Hall Voltage take-olf electrode means for producing a Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, said signal transmitter comprising two permanent magnets mounted on said signal carrier with two of their like poles adjacent, the magnets being oriented with their magnetic axes extending generally in the direction of relative movement of the signal carrier and pickupy head, and forming a narrow field gap between the said adjacent poles of like polarity, whereby the Hall Voltage generated by said Hall plate changes in direction and passes through a minimum magnitude value when said pickup head passes by said field gap and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having flux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto.

7. The apparatus defined in claim 6, the two magnetizable plates being of ferrite material, the Hall plate comprising a coating of semiconductor material on one of said ferrite plates, the semiconductor material being formed of a semiconductor compound having a higher carrier mobility than germanium, taken from the group consisting of indium antirnonide and indium arsenide, the said pickup gap having at the side facing the signal carrier an effective gap Width not greater than four microns.

8. A magneto-electric signal transmission apparatus, comprising a magnetic signal carrier and a pickup head for response to magnetic signals issuing from said signal carrier along a given path of relative motion, the pickup head comprising magnetizable structure having two magnetizable plates with respective parallel planar surfaces located opposite each other and forming a narrow essentially planar pickup gap facing said path of relative motion and extending at a right angle thereto, a Hall plate `of semiconductor material mounted in said gap substantially in face-to-face contact with said surfaces, said Hall plate having two current supply terminals on two opposite edges respectively to define a current axis that is transverse to the direction of said relative motion and is within said gap and is generally parallel to the surface of the signal carrier, and two Hall voltage take-off electrodes on the other two respective edges for producing between said two Hall electrodes a Hall voltage in response to the magnetic signals, one of said other two edges being located within said gap and at the gap side which faces said signal carrier and extending transverse to said path, the other of said two other edges being the edge that is remote from the signal carrier, said signal carrier comprising two permanent magnets mounted with two of their like poles adjacent, the magnets being -oriented with their magnetic axes extending generally in the direction of relative movement of the signal carrier and pickup head, and forming a narrow field gap between the said adjacent poles of like polarity, whereby the Hall voltage generated by said Hall plate changes in direction and passes through a minimum magnitude value when said pickup head passes by said eld gap and said permanent magnets providing a magnetic field having flux lines which cut said Hall plate substantially perpendicularly thereto.

References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,866,013 12/1958 Reis 179-1002 2,907,834 lO/1959 Duinker et al 179-1002 2,988,650 6/1961 Weiss 317-234 3,027,549 3/1962 Allen 340-174.1

OTHER REFERENCES Burnstein and Pollak: Elements of Tape Recorder Circuits, copyright 1957, Gernsback Library, Inc., New York, N.Y.

BERNARD KONICK, Primary Examiner.

IRVING SRAGOW, Examiner.

I. R. GOUDEAU, P. ROTH, Assistant Examiners. 

1. A MAGNETO-ELECTRIC SIGNAL TRANSMISSION APPARATUS, COMPRISING A MAGNETIC SIGNAL TRANSMITTER AND A PICKUP DEVICE FOR RESPONSE TO MAGNETIC SIGNALS ISSUING FROM SAID SIGNAL TRANSMITTER ALONG A GIVE PATH OF RELATIVE MOTION, THE PICKUP DEVICE COMPRISING A HALL PLATE OF SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL DISPOSED TRANSVERSELY TO SAID PATH OF RELATIVE MOTION, SAID HALL PLATE HAVING CURRENT SUPPLY TERMINALS DEFINING A CURRENT AXIS WHICH IS TRANSVERSE TO THE DIRECTION OF SAID RELATIVE MOTION AND WHICH IS LONGITUDINAL TO THE SURFACE OF SIGNAL TRANSMITTER, THE HALL PLATE HAVING HALL VOLTAGE ELECTRODE MEANS FOR PRODUCING A HALL VOLTAGE IN RESPONSE TO THE MAGNETIC SIGNALS SAID SIGNAL TRANSMITTER COMPRISING TWO PERMANENT MAGNETS MOUNTED WITH THEIR MAGNETIC AXES TRANSVERSE TO SAID PATH OF RELATIVE MOTION AND WITH MUTUALLY OPPOSED POLARITIES BESIDE EACH OTHER AND FORMING A NARROW FIELD GAP BETWEEN RESPECTIVE ADJACENT POLES OF OPPOSITE POLARITIES, SAID FIELD GAP FACING SAID PATH OF RELATIVE MOTION AND SAID PERMANENT MAGNETS PROVIDING A MAGNETIC FIELD HAVING FLUX LINES WHICH CUT SAID HALL PLATE SUBSTANTIALLY PERPENDICULARLY THERETO WHEREBY THE HALL VOLTAGE OF SAID HALL PLATE PASSES THROUGH A MAXIMAL MAGNITUDE WHEAN SAID PICKUP NDEVICE AND SAID FIELD GAP PASS BY EACH OTHER. 